tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News September 7, 2022 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT
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the cool person behind the scenes? i'm really that cool, but we also have cool people behind the scenes. when we launched the show, we had one rule. funk music in the breaks. that's it. that's all for tonight. dvr the show. "tucker carlson" is up next. always arm, i'm watters, and this is my world. >> tucker: good evening. welcome to "tucker carlson." braddock is basically empty at this point. only 1700 people live there, down from a population of more than 18,000 during the second world war. braddock is now so underpopulated that you can buy a four-bedroom home there with a two-car garage in the middle of town for $3,000.
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don't believe it. check it out yourself on realtor.com. so, you know, the story, for decades the biggest employer in braddock was manufacturing. something called the edgar thompson steelworks. in fact, andrew carnegie. the plants closed, and there was unemployment and people left by the thousands. one man saw an opportunity in braddock, pennsylvania, not an opportunity for the town, but for himself. that man's name was john fetorman. he was 35 years old, never in his life had a real job. getterman was not from braddock. he spent his life going to business school, then to harvard for a so-called masters of public policy, which for the uninitiated is an utterly meaningless document that you pay hundreds of thousands of
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dollars to get in order to tell people that you went to harvard. in fetterman's case, his dad paid for it, and paid for everything else. for a long stretch, deep into his 40s, his income came from his family. in other words, john fetterman was a classic trustforian. in 2005, a year after arriving in braddock, fetterman announced he was running for mayor. amazingly, boldly, given that he was a professional student, living off his rich family, john fetterman decided to run as a blue collar populist. they asked no questions. they loved it. in john fetterman, the media saw themselves. he was just like them. fetterman narrowly won the race, and then the campaign to boost john fetterman's career began in
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einearnest. fetterman went on a national tour to brag about how he was single-handedly saving a benighted million town in western pennsylvania. he gave a ted talk, about how he was running braddock using the lessons he learned at harvard. in 2011, he went to the aspen ideas festival to further brag. here's what he said. quote, we created the first art gallery in the region with artist studios. we did public art installation. i don't know if you consider art it exactly, but i consider growing organic vegetables an art, and that's attracted homesteading. it's so perfect.
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homesteading, organic vegetables, art installation. and a heaping dose of climate theology, all imported from harvard. he imposed carbon caps on braddock, pennsylvania. he said it would bring more manufacturing jobs back. he called this initiative carbon caps equals hard hats. so expensive unreliable energy will mean more manufacturing job. how no one laughed at him. john fetterman kept going. in a 2009 advertisement for himself, he promised that, quote, with a smart, economically viable carbon cap policy in place, communities like braddock can begin to build its manufacturing and middle-class back up. this whole notion if we can continue to operate as we have been, and ignore climate change, is ludicrous. ha-ha-ha. they loved it at the aspen institute. and to be fair, john fetterman did not ignore climate change. he talked about climate change
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endlessly. he made climate change the centerpiece of his administration in braddock, pennsylvania. as for actually running the town or improving the town in braddock, he was not interested. not even billings interested. that's proveable. as mayor, according to public records obtained by the washington free beacon, fetterman missed more than a third of the borough's monthly meetings, because he was off at the aspen institute. in his entire tenure as the mayor of braddock, john fetterman cast a single vote, a procedural vote for borough president. what happened next? this is our favorite part of the story. what were the results? how did braddock, pennsylvania, fair under the leadership of john fetterman? we want to be as fair and objective as we can be. under his tenure, as mayor of braddock, pennsylvania, the seas did not rise. that's true. braddock is still on dry land. of course it's far from the ocean, but it's still dry.
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so his climate policy worked. he can be proud of that, but the population is at the lowest level ever recorded. the median income in braddock, pennsylvania, is $14,000 a year. more than a third of households in braddock live below the poverty line. braddock, by the way, has one of the highest crime rates in the state of pennsylvania. in 2018, shortly after fetterman left office, braddock's per capita murder rate was higher than it is in some of the most dangerous countries in the world. honduras and belize are safer than braddock, pennsylvania. so that's a failure. and in a functioning system, a record like this would have disqualified john fetterman from ever running for anything again. he failed demonstrably as a leader. a higher murder rate than honduras and lowest population ever recorded. sorry, climate change didn't improve the town. in a fair system, a system that cared about achievement, john
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fetterman would be leaving politics on the express train and moving on to something like interpretive dance. try that. maybe get his dad to pay for ski lessons and move to aspen. or something. we don't have a functioning meritocracy, much less a functioning political system. we have a very broken one. having wrecked braddock, he became lieutenant governor, and now plans to run for the united states senate. what's he going to do he gets there? his idea is to make the entire country much more like braddock with higher crime rates. we're not making that up. here he is, june fetterman, in 2020, as lieutenant governor, fantizeing about giving amnesty to thousands of violent criminals, including murderers. >> if you had a magic wand, could wave it, fix one thing, what would it be? >> life without parole in pennsylvania. we could save billions in revenue long term, save thousands of lives, and not make anyone else less safe.
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and also expunge as many permanent records of people living their best lives, paying well beyond when they should have for a charge that they thought, you know, 10, 15, 20 years ago. >> tucker: so in huge parts of pennsylvania, which is a big state, real state, filled with really nice people, an economic powerhouse for more than a hundred years, in huge parts of that state, there are no jobs. there's poverty. there's hopelessness. there are huge numbers of drug o.d.s. that state has been devastated by opioded, by fentanyl. but john fetterman, if he could make one change to the state of pennsylvania, he'd let the murderers out. right. that's who he cares about. so in pennsylvania, typically if you commit murder you get life in prison, as you should. you don't have to kill people. fetterman would change that. he'd hike you out of jail as quickly as possible. no actual poppist or working class person talks like this,
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worries about punishing murderers too much. maybe if you achieve the first 115 things on your to-do list, you'd worry if murderers were serving too much time in might prison,after you got people jobr you convinced people to stay in the state where they were born, after you fixed the fact that thousands of people are dying of drug o.d.s. only rich kids think like that. only working man wears a hoody to a political event. all your stupid fake tattoos. it's a costume of course. duh. it's not real. john fetterman inspired by his time at harvard and the aspen institute would like to free a third of the prison population in pennsylvania. that's just for starters. watch. >> i was on a panel with secretary wetzel earlier before the pandemic hit, and he said something remarkable that i agree with. he said, we could reduce our prison population by a third and
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not make anyone less safe in pennsylvania. that's a profound statement. >> tucker: it's not a profound statement. it's absurd. it's ridiculous. oh, it's a p profound statement. where do you learn to talk like this, says the guy who wears a hoody. you wrecked the town you ran, didn't show up at council meetings. let the murderers out. we'll have a safer society when we let the inscourgible violent run amongst it. he made braddock, pennsylvania, more violent than honduras. it's to change the state forever for his own political benefit. the point is to flood the state of pennsylvania with brand-new voters, all of them loyal to the democratic party. more voter fraud, please. fetterman has been in lockstep with the leaders of his party on that question from the very beginning. that's why he would like to get
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rid of all barriers to voter fraud, including and especially voter id, as soon as possible. >> in my own state, they are going to pass, attempt to pass, a constitutional amendment, making sure that universal voting id for every time you vote, not just when you sign up to vote, but every time you vote, because they understand that at any given time there's tens of thousands of pennsylvanians who typically are on the -- are on the poorer side, and are people of color, that are less likely to have their id at any one given time. >> tucker: so poor people don't have ids? really? 'cause everyone who lives in our society over the age of 18 has a government-issued id, because you can't live here otherwise, and can't collect government benefits without one. can't do anything without one. that's a lie. he's affirmatively abetting voter fraud. the clips we just played were june fetterman speaking before
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he had -- and we say with no glee, but with deep sympathy -- a massive stroke. his campaign says the stroke occurred shortly before he won the democratic state primary in may. whenever it happened, or whatever caused it, the stroke has been profound, rendered fetterman unable to speakko coherently. we don't say it mean, but it's about the country he hopes to control if elected to the united states senate. it's bad. it's really bad. here he was campaigning recently in pittsburgh, for example. >> just earlier today i was so proud to march with you in downtown pittsburgh, labor day -- happy labor day. send me to washington, d.c. to send -- so i can work with senator casey, and i can champion the union way of life in jersey -- excuse me -- in
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d.c. thank you. thank you very much. it's an honor. i live eight minutes away from here. when i leave tonight, i got three miles away, dr. oz, in his mansion in new jersey, you've got a friend, and you have an ally. send me to washington, d.c. >> tucker: you know, it's not even worth making fun of. it's sad. but when cognition goes, when the ability to think clearly disappears, and in his case it obviously has, what's left? the talking points. that's all that remains. that's all he has. the talking points. the union way of life. this kid lived off his parents until he was in his mid 40s. he's never been in a union. what are you talking about, you fraud. not surprisingly fetterman has refused, up until today, to schedule a debate with his opponent, dr. oz. just hours ago he announced he's willing to debate. no details are forthcoming. sometime in mid-october.
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of course, when the early voting has already been well in progress. it's starting now, by the way, the early voting in pennsylvania. so if you delay the debate to right before the election it's irrelevant, because people have already voted. only democrats seem to understand this. he doesn't even talk to the media at this point, because he can't. in some cases, here's one, his staffers won't let him answer questions that he's posed. watch this. >> hey, john, are you afraid to debate dr. oz? are you afraid to debate dr. oz? >> thank you, john. >> are you going to debate him? he's offered you five debates. are you going to debate him? >> tucker: his hoody and fraudulent tattoos. i mean, honestly, this is like the barista in brooklyn dressing like a lumberjack please, you fake. the guy can't even talk.
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john fetterman, a candidate for the u.s. senate cannot speak. watch. >> members of the united steel workers tuesday, fetterman was on message, but often halting in his speech, and occasionally dropped words mid-sentence. >> being anti-union is anti-american. what is wrong with demanding for an easy, safe kind of their income, a path to a safe place for them to win -- or excuse me -- to work. >> fetterman declined to answer questions from cnn and other reporters at the event. >> tucker: so we could go on and on and play you more tape, but it's just awful. nobody wants to watch it. we want to make the point, this guy is completely repaired. that's not a republican talking point. it's completely real.
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so think about what that means. the democratic apparent has not replaced him. this has been going on since he got the nomination, but he's still in the race. that's shocking and it's insulting, not simply to voters in pennsylvania, but to the rest of us, because if elected we'll have to live under his rule, but the democratic party prefers it that way. they did it with biden. they're trying to do it again with fetterman. run a wax dummy for office. people who can't complete complete sentences can't talk. fetterman and biden are much easier to control. so on the one occasion fetterman has been asked directly about this, wait a second, you're cognitively impaired. how did he respond? if you've got a problem with a brain-damaged senator, you're a bigot. watch this. >> can you even imagine, if you have a doctor mocking your
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illness, ridiculing that? well, here we are. here we are right now. i would like to think that dr. oz may have really lost his way if you're going to make fun of somebody that had a stroke. >> tucker: oh, making fun of people. how dare you do that. he's disabled. shut up. accept it. how dare you acknowledge the obvious. you have no right. this is all about john fetterman's personal journey. so you're not allowed to ask, well, how does this affect me, if that guy can't think clearly is elected to the united states senate? that's implight. they do it on so many issues. they're doing it with him. it works. most people just shut up. it's considered completely out of bounds to mention the fact that john fetterman is completely incapable of representing pennsylvania in the united states senate. as we said, that fact -- and it is a fact -- is fine with the people who run the democratic
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party. they just want the power. the rest of us should be very worried by this. if they can get this guy elected statewide in this assassination's fifth largest state, this guy, an incompetent husk, with incredibly stupid and totally proveable destructive ideas, a man with no record of achievement at all, a man with a long list of documented failures, a man who, by the way, cannot think clearly, if they can do that, they can do literally anything. anything. tomorrow our two-part documentary goes live on fox nation. we think it's really important. after doing it, at the end of the research that we did for this, all the interviews we did with it, including some of the victims of these procedures, we were more astounded than we've ever been that this is happening in this country, that it's legal, and that people with
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medical degrees are abetting it. it's shocking. we think you'll find the same way when watching it. here's a first look at what we found. here it is. >> the testosterone kind of this this effect on me, with every step i took it would feel good for a short amount of time. but then eventually those same feelings come back up. >> the initial euphoria that you go through, i changed my gender, and everything is going to be wonderful. >> it was euphoric. i was, like, the feeling i had when i started living as a man was -- i was free. i was finally who i should have been all along. >> tucker: but that euphoria was short-lived. >> my mental health just got worse. my ability to socialize just got worse. i felt so disconnected from myself. i started using, like, drugs and alcohol as a crutch. i was just a total disaster. the effects of the testosterone
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on my mental health specifically just made everything 10 million times worse. >> i lost my job. i was homeless. i was laying in a park in long beach, california, in a pile of vomit, trying to get my life back. i went down the street to a friend's house, and attempted to overdose on cocaine because i was just done. i had bought into the lie. almost took my life. >> tucker: no research has ever shown that gender affirmative care, hormone therapy, reduces the risk of suicide, or indeed improves mental health outcomes of any kind over the long term. however, there's some evidence to suggest the opposite. children who receive trans treatment are more likely to kill themselves. one comprehensive 30-year study in sweden that captured almost
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the entire population of surgically reassigned transgender individuals from 1973 to 2003, showed that postoperative transgenders were over 19 times more likely to kill themselves than the general population that. doesn't stop physicians from pushing for more. >> tucker: deny nature, mutilate your own body. that's liberation, but it's not liberation, it's a tragedy. when it's perpetrated on children, it's a crime. that's the docum subject of ourw documentary. the state of california, you've been watching it for the past 10 years, decline has been the trend.
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>> tucker: so the state of california is of great interest to anyone who wants to know the future of the rest of the country because it's like a metaphor for america more bradley. like our country, california has a lot of energy. in fact, there's enough energy in california to power the entire united states. just like in the broader u.s. we've got enough energy, we're not just using it. that means that tonight everyone who owns a cellphone in the state of california is getting texts telling them not to use electricity because they'll have blackouts. can california keep the electricity flowing through the outlets? trace gallagher joins us. hey, trace. >> we're back again, in emergency energy territory. for days now we've been
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teetering between levels two and three, the most severe. it means big-time potential for what the state calls power curtailments, better known as blackouts, or rolling power outages. of course the theory behind turning the power off on a rolling basis is to make sure the entire grid doesn't fail, leaving millions in the dark, in dangerous heat for days on end. on top of the heat wave there's a few other problems with california's already failing grid system. hydropower is down because water levels are down. solar power is up, which helps during the day, but the state doesn't have enough battery power to soar solar, so it's use it or lose it. that's why especially at night the grid is powered by good old fossil fuels. during this record heat we've learned that governor gavin newsom is so cool that he wore a fleece jacket in which he what he said was a 78-degree room. he skipped the winter attire, but explained why he's cool
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beyond words. >> cool your home, and make sure the thermostat is above 78 degrees. still feels cool beyond words. i walked in, 78 degrees, and felt i needed a jacket between the distinction between the elements on the outside and inside. >> record heat, he's cool, even in record heat. tucker? >> tucker: he certainly is. trace calger, great to see you. you think a normal leader would say if you ran a state, for example, you're president of a country, you would say i can't keep the power on. i'm sorry. that was, like, a fundamental part of the bargain i made with you, the people who voted for me, when you did vote for me, that i would keep the lights on, but they never apologized. they blame you. don't use your dryer. okay, pal. stop using your dryer. how's that sound? remember back to covid, when the leaders told us our natural rights would be suspended to, quote, flatten the curve. it's been the refrain for the
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past years during the covid pandemic, which was totally real. this week we heard the phrase again. leaders in europe are bringing back the phrase "flatten the curve," but this time they're not talking about covid. something bigger is going on. here's the president of the european commission, announcing that europe must flatten the curve, but not for covid. watch this. >> this is expensive. we have to flatten the curve and avoid the peak demands. we propose a mandatory target for reducing electricity use at peak hours, and we will work very closely with the member states to achieve this. >> tucker: oh, so we have to flatten the curve, because you screwed up and we don't have enough energy now. how long before the climate lockdowns? let's say that again. how long before the climate
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lockdowns? laugh? well, it wasn't that long ago that europeans laughed at the idea that they might run out of energy some day. in great britain, contestants are being paid with a prize. watch. >> i've got a prepayment meters, and it's absolutely murder. >> here we go. around and around it goes. where it stops, nobody knows. a thousand pounds or energy bill. it is going to be -- under the circumstances your energy bill. >> oh, my god. thank you. >> we are paying your energy bill for four months. >> tucker: that country used to run the world. people used to fear great
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britain. hard to remember that now that it's been so completely degraded. now that in order to keep your apt warm in the winter you have to win a game show. how did this happen? michael shellenberger is the author of "apocalypse never: why environmental alarmism hurts us all." he ran for governor in california, and sadly did not win. michael shellenberger joins us now. i know you're not a gloater, but this is completely sad. turns out you were right. >> we've been shutting down nuclear power plants, natural gas power plants. we pay the most for electricity of anybody in the continental united states, and yet they can't keep the lights on. the governor was wearing a fleece jacket. there's no way he was in an environment of 78 degrees or
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warmer wearing that jacket. he was in an air-conditioned environment. he's not apologized for what he's done here. this is a case study inideology makes people incompetent and stupid frankly. i mean, there's no excuse for this. when there's blackouts, tucker, as you know, people die. air conditioners don't work. the elderly, the singling, are the most vulnerable. this is really inexcusable. i think it's a warning to the rest of the united states to not go down this path of over relying on weather did not renewable energies. >> tucker: it really is a cult. i mean, he doesn't apologize because he sincerely believes the one true faith of renewable energy. that's my takeaway. >> well, yeah. i mean, i've been writing about this. people that move away from traditional religion, they basically turn nature into a new god, a new victim god, that on one hand they want to take orders from and the other hand
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harmonize with through renewables. the problem is weather doesn't cooperate. we're getting 10% less electricity from carbon-free sources today than we were 10 years ago. >> tucker: and then they destroy the environment, because they don't love nature. those of us who do are highly annoyed. michael shellenberg, sure appreciate you coming on tonight. thank you very much. the biden family turned out to be completely corrupt. i mean, completely corrupt. so corrupt you need to make a movie about their corruption. hunter biden's criminal behavior. well, someone did. we'll talk to one of the stars of that film straight ahead. st . thankfully, voya provides comprehensive solutions and shows me how to get the most out of my workplace benefits. voya helps me feel like i've got it all under control. voya. well planned. well invested. well protected.
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cleanser. this position is trying to pander to voters. it's amazing. >> i'm the grandson of immigrants. my grandfather immigrated from greece. my grandmother immigrated from lebanon. the spicy hispanic-type food is not unnatural to me at all. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: so great. that's not an endorsement, of course. why is charlie crist doing this? to humiliate himself in late middle age? he's always welcome on this show to talk about his heritage, his
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latinx community. there's a new movie out called "my son hunter" distributed by breitbart. >> how did they get your laptop and take it to the fbi? >> i got water damage. i took it to be fixed. >> what? were you swimming with it? >> i forgot to pick it up. >> forgot to pick it up? >> i was so busy. >> oh, come on, man, what kind of moron forgets to pick up his laptop at a repair shop. were you high or drunk? >> no, dad. i'm sober. >> bull [bleep]. >> tucker: you must have learned a lot playing this role. you must have immersed yourself in it. what did you learn about the biden family? >> good evening, tucker. i learned a lot. mostly, though, i'm grateful for the fact that i haven't
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mysteriously fallen from a sixth-story balcony or accidentally hung myself in the last day. i learned that hunter is a man who wants to please his father, but ultimately it would be funny if it wasn't this family who basically seemed to have sold the air america's future to the chinese on the sly. >> tucker: it does seem -- in fact, i think that's been verified. there's a very famous scene not often talked about in the public from the laptop, about m&ms, an american hard candy, and hunter's use of them in a provocative and obscene way. is that scene replicated in the film? >> i cannot confirm or deny whether i had stagefright that day, tucker. >> tucker: okay. so it's possible for our viewers, thinking about watching this movie, the m&ms scene could be in there? i want to give a fair warning. >> no. it's aimed at everybody.
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the most important thing actually is the film is watched by democrats as well, because these conversations are the ones that are going to be the things that change culture. back in the day this film would have been made by oliver stone. you know, it wouldn't have been down to small independent filmmakers to make it. hollywood would have land it. hollywood has been corrupted by the woke ideology, they won't go near this, along with the fbi. >> tucker: that's such a smart point. probably will watch this movie, and probably agree with it. just a guess. we appreciate you doing the movie, coming on, telling us about it. congratulations. >> thank you. >> tucker: cindy cortez once famously said that republicans who criticize her now want to date her. now she says they're trying to kill her. she's impressed. personally anyway.
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>> tucker: at some point, boston university in boston, somebody told sandy cortez she was oppressed. she was oppressed. that a white girl with a conquestion is territory's name has been running on it ever since. she's on the cover of "g.q." that's how oppressed. she said, realistically, i can't even tell you if i'll be alive in september, and that weighs heavily on me. if sandy cortez was your 13-year-old daughter, and sounds like it, you would tell her to calm down, stop being hysterical, you'll be alive in september. i think you'll be okay. but because this is 2022, we're in america, she could die. ha-ha-ha. another piece in "vogue" about
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brown jackson. can't make sense of that. that's why we've asked the author of "liberal what do you make of this? >> this is something which the media has down to a science. the democratic party, the media claiming victimhood, claiming to be aggrieved, claiming to be oppressed on account of sex, gender, sexual identity. it's rewarded by our culture which is dominated by the left. if you get glossy spreads on "gq," lots of money. you can get a raise, lots of attention. this is otherwise known as the jussie smollett effect. >> tucker: if you are c.a.d. cortez and you are literally from an affluent town in westchester and you are named after a conquistador.
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cortez! you are telling everyone you are depressed racial minority. oh, yes, you are. how does this continue? [cackling] >> the greatest scam graduated on the american people. you see it time and time again. you see so many fake hate crime hoaxes. beau who want attention, this is how they get it. >> tucker: is unlivable and it works. great to see you. we are not being mean we couldn't help but notice that health officials seem unhealthy. that's next. jaw-dropping.
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minister? this is the person who pushed covid lockdowns, pushed covid shots on children. teresa coffey. with the gym owners in jail. it's not just her. health ministers all of the world seem to have something in common. here is the health minister in belgium until recently. did she retire for medical reasons? we are not entirely sure what she is no longer the health minister. she may have some health concerns to attend to herself. here in the united states we have rachel levine, a admiral levine who literally dresses a woman even though he is a dude. that is our health-food authority. be sure to put the gym owners in jail. anyone is practicing mma or professional sports
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>> tucker: the lady from great britain's smoking. [laughs] if only that wasn't an anti-vice propaganda poster. that was the actual new health minister. amazing. we are out of time. we are going to be on "fox and friends" early tomorrow to debut our new documentary. we hope you watch it and we'll see you tomorrow. sean hannity takes over right now. >> sean: thank you as always. we begin tonight with a fox news alert. be aware. a suspect picture right there according to police has been on a shooting rampage in memphis, tennessee. believed to have streamed much of it live on social media. police are saying that the suspect is still at large and urging residents to stay indoors. we will continue to monitor the situation and bring you any updates throughout the night. tonight in 62 days you will decide the balance of power in
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